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Brooklyn Nets need furious comeback vs. Sixers to log first win

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PHILADELPHIA — After the Brooklyn Nets needed to score 16 of the final 17 points and a triple-double from Kevin Durant to win their first game of the season, coach Steve Nash said he loved the competitiveness he saw but also set early expectations for his title contender.

“It’s not going to be pretty for a little while here,” Nash said after the Nets’ come-from-behind, 114-109 win that spoiled the Sixers’ home opener. “We just got to continue to fight, play for each other and figure out ways to compete and stay engaged while we figure out rotations and combinations and what we are all about.”

Nash said his two stars, Durant and James Harden, aren’t just learning all the new players on the Brooklyn roster but also are figuring out how to play without Kyrie Irving.

The coach has been preaching patience as he experiments with big and small lineups and different rotations. Harden, though, said he and Durant will figure out how to lead the team while Irving remains absent.

“We’re the best at what we do. We’ll figure it out,” Harden said. “Me personally, I’ve been through a lot where I had different teammates, different lineups and playing small ball, so I’m used to trying to figure it out and just go with the flow and making it work. We have a really good team, and we’ll figure it out.

“Kevin is the same way and one of the best to ever touch a basketball. So we just got to go out there and do what we do and things will work out.”

After the Nets were blown out, 127-104, by the defending champion Milwaukee Bucks on the road in the season opener, Brooklyn got off to another slow start that saw it fall behind 20-6 to a Philadelphia team dealing with its own drama surrounding star point guard Ben Simmons.

Durant, though, had his second career triple-double with the Nets by the end of the third quarter before finishing with 29 points, 15 rebounds and 12 assists. Down 108-98 with 5:33 remaining, he found LaMarcus Aldridge for a basket before drilling a 16-foot pull-up jumper.

Aldridge was terrific for the Nets, scoring nine of his 23 points in the final 5:16. The big man, who retired in April due to heart concerns before being medically cleared to return, was 10-for-12 from the field. New Nets guard Patty Mills continued to take advantage of Irving’s absence with 11 points off the bench. Mills has made his first 10 3-point shots of the season.

“I think they are excited for their new teammates,” Nash said of Durant and Harden, who had 20 points, 8 assists and 7 rebounds. “But it takes time to find that rhythm and combinations. And also we lost a big piece [Irving].

“It is not just the new pieces, it’s the void that we are used to playing with. It is, it is a lot for us to take on at this moment in time. But hopefully in the weeks coming, we start to clear some of the debris so to speak and figure out how we can best play together.”

Durant said each game will present a new challenge for him and Harden. In Philadelphia, Durant felt the need to score early before getting into the paint and making plays for teammates due to Philadelphia’s defensive coverage.

“We wasn’t planning on having to do this, but you know, it’s good for us to make adjustments,” Durant said of playing without Irving. “It’s good for guys who wasn’t expecting to play bigger roles to step into those roles and see who we are. This is the situation we were in, and I think a lot of guys have taken advantage of it.

“For James and myself, it feels like each game may be different and we may have to do different things than we thought coming into the season. But it’s all good. It’s always gonna help us get better.”

Whyte receives strong Fury warning as he eyes world title clash | Boxing | Sport

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Dillian Whyte has been tipped to land an eventual world title bout with Tyson Fury, but has been warned by a fellow heavyweight he has little chance of beating “the best heavyweight since Lennox Lewis.” Whyte, 33, was left devastated this week when a shoulder injury ruled him out of his scheduled fight with Otto Wallin on October 30.

Whyte has made no secret of his desire to face Fury, and is currently the mandatory challenger to his WBO title. 

Had he beaten Swedish fighter Wallin, it was then widely expected negotiations would begin for an all-British bout between the pair.

However, another British heavyweight in Dave Allen believes ‘The Body Snatcher’ will still get the shot he craves, but doesn’t fancy his chances against Fury.

Speaking to talkSPORT, Allen said: “I think the question a lot of people are asking is, ‘Will he get a world title shot?’

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“Can he win it? I personally don’t think he beats Tyson Fury, so if that’s who he must beat to win the wold title then the answer to your question would be no.

“I hope he gets his shot, I wish him all the best with it, but I just think he is coming up against Tyson Fury who, in my eyes, is the best heavyweight since Lennox Lewis.”

Allen, 29, still thinks the bout would appeal to British boxing fans, even if it’s not the battle that many have been craving.

“That’s unfortunate for him, but I’m sure he will fancy the job as will his team, as will his supporters.

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“So it will be an interesting fight and a massive one for Great Britain. It’s not quite Fury vs Joshua, but it is pretty big.”

Following his injury setback, Whyte himself admitted: “I am devastated as I had a great camp, was in great shape, and had great sparring.

“I was looking forward to knocking Wallin out and would have done so in the first half of the fight.

“I am devastated about not being able to fight on October 30 but I want to thank everyone for all of their support.”

 

Hamilton: I hope we make it through turn one…

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lewis-hamilton-mercedes-parc-ferme verstappen car

Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton hopes he will make it through the opening corner of the 2021 United States Grand Prix in one piece as he lines up beside world title rival Max Verstappen on the front row of the grid today.

Red Bull’s Verstappen will have the advantage of starting from pole position after he beat his Mercedes rival to top spot by two tenths at a packed and sizzling Circuit of Americas in Austin.

Hamilton and Verstappen have already collided on two occasions this season – at Silverstone and Monza – and Turn 1, at COTA, is arguably one of the trickest first corners on the Formula 1 calendar with mayhem possible (even expected) as 20 of the world’s fastest cars power off the start line, with the two title contenders at the head of the field.

“I hope we make it through turn one and we get a good race,” said Hamilton during the post-qualifying press conference. “It is all fun and games. We are going to have fun, and give it everything as you would expect. It is no real difference to any other part of the season.”

Meanwhile, Verstappen, sitting to Hamilton’s left during the press conference, appeared to take umbrage with the line of questioning.

“I don’t see why we have to keep bringing this up,” the 24-year-old said. “It is not like we are the only ones who have touched in this sport.

“These things happen, unfortunately. But we are on the front row again and everyone is just expecting a great race and as drivers, that is what we expect, too. We will be professional,” insisted the Dutch ace.

Hamilton’s ferocious title battle with Verstappen was granted extra spice here on Friday, when they clashed in second practice.

Verstappen ran wide through the exit of the final corner before going wheel-to-wheel with Hamilton at 180mph on the uphill drag to the first turn.

Verstappen eventually conceded position to Hamilton before raising his middle finger in his rival’s direction and calling him a “stupid idiot”.

Commenting on the flashpoint, Hamilton added: “I didn’t run him wide. He decided to go round the outside and ended up going wide because we were battling into the last corner. It was a silly thing [to do].”

The Circuit of the Americas has been a happy stomping ground for Hamilton and Mercedes in the past.

Hamilton secured his third and sixth world titles here in 2015 and 2019 respectively, and has triumphed in Austin in five of his eight outings. A Mercedes car has started from pole at every race since 2014.

But Hamilton, six points behind Verstappen in his quest for a record-breaking eighth title, had no answer as the Dutchman romped to his 12th pole.

“Sorry, guys,” said Hamilton over the radio after he finished 0.209 sec adrift of Verstappen.

However, the Briton, who was fourth after the first runs in Q3, will take some comfort from splitting the two Red Bulls, with Sergio Perez third.

Charles Leclerc will start fourth ahead of Ferrari team-mate Carlos Sainz, while Lando Norris will be promoted to seventh following Valtteri Bottas’ punishment. The Finn took fourth, but is demoted to ninth after taking on his sixth engine of the season.

F1’s return to the United States – after last year’s race was scrapped because of the pandemic – has been greeted with spectacular enthusiasm.

A bumper crowd of 120,000 watched qualifying, while 140,000 are expected for Sunday’s race while TV viewing figures mya be the highest ever for a Grand Prix in the States.

Miami will be added to the calendar next season with a third race on American soil – understood to be in Las Vegas – expected for 2023.

A plethora of big names, including Hollywood actors Brad Pitt and Matthew McConaughey, 23-time Grand Slam winner Serena Williams and Rory McIlroy will bring star appeal to Sunday’s round.

Doncic has 27 points, 12 assists as Mavs beat Raptors 103-95

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TORONTO (AP) — Luka Doncic and the Dallas Mavericks shook off the disappointment of a season-opening defeat with an impressive comeback win in Toronto.

Doncic had 27 points, 12 assists and nine rebounds, narrowly missing his 37th career triple-double, Kristaps Porzingis had 18 points and 10 rebounds, and the Mavericks rallied from an early 14-point deficit to beat the Raptors 103-95 Saturday night.

“Our defense wasn’t the best in the first half,” Doncic said. “In the second half we stayed together, we picked it up, not like the first game. I think that was the key.”

Tim Hardaway Jr. scored 13 of his 25 points in the fourth quarter and Dwight Powell and Dorian Finney-Smith each had 11 as Dallas bounced back from Thursday’s loss at Atlanta.

“We were tested in Atlanta and we didn’t respond well,” new Dallas coach Jason Kidd said. “I thought the guys responded well here tonight, on the road.”

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Hardaway credited Kidd for lifiting the team’s spirits with some encouraging words before tip off.

“Coach Kidd said before the game ‘Great teams, they don’t lose two in a row, and they find a way to win, especially in hard situations,’” Hardaway said. “We just wanted to make sure that we finished strong and played hard on both ends of the floor, and didn’t want to question ourselves after the game.”

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OG Anunoby scored 23 points for the Raptors, who were playing the second game of a back-to-back. Toronto won 115-83 at Boston Friday.

Fred VanVleet scored 20 points and Scottie Barnes had 17. Precious Achiuwa had 10 points and 12 rebounds and Gary Trent Jr. scored 12 points.

Anunoby and Trent combined for 30 points in the first half but had just five between them in the second as the Raptors couldn’t make an early lead stand up.

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“Those are the nights right there where we really need our bench to provide some energy,” Raptors head coach Nick Nurse said. “At home, back-to-back, they really need to give us something and they got outplayed pretty badly, I thought.”

The Mavericks shot a dismal 32.6% (31 of 93) from the field against the Hawks Thursday, and weren’t much better in the early going against Toronto, missing nine of their first 10 attempts. Dallas went 0 for 8 from 3-point range in the first quarter.

Anunoby had 12 points in the first as Toronto led 25-18 after one.

Barnes went to the locker room for treatment after bruising his left quadriceps muscle early in the second quarter and did not play again in the half. Toronto led 51-45 at the intermission.

Barnes returned in the third but Dallas tied it at 62-all on a basket by Doncic with 6:06 left in the quarter, then took their first lead of the game when Powell dunked after a Toronto turnover. Doncic followed with his first 3-pointer after starting 0 for 5 from distance, then hit another jumper to complete a 12-0 run for the Mavs.

Doncic scored 12 points in the third as Dallas took a narrow 74-72 lead to the fourth.

TIP-INS

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Mavericks: Dallas scored 15 points off 12 Toronto turnovers. … Hardaway shot 7 for 11from 3-point range, while Doncic went 2 for 10. … The visiting team won for the second time in nine meetings between Toronto and Dallas.

Raptors: G/F Svi Mykhailiuk needed four stitches at halftime to close a cut on his head. Mykhailiuk was hurt in an accidental collision with Porzingis late in the second. Mykhailiuk returned in the third. … F Pascal Siakam (left shoulder) is now practicing with light contact, coach Nick Nurse said. … F Yuta Watanabe (left calf) is expected to start practicing Tuesday.

SO CLOSE!

Doncic missed a triple-double by one rebound or one assist for the 15th time.

NOT SO CLOSE

This was the fourth time in 17 meetings that a game between Dallas and Toronto wasn’t decided by fewer than 10 points.

SPECIAL DELIVERY

VanVleet and Achiuwa connected on the basket of the game, with VanVleet finding his teammate for a half-court lob pass late in the third.

UP NEXT

Mavericks: Open their home schedule against Houston on Tuesday night.

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Raptors: Host Chicago on Monday night.

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More AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports




© 2021 The Canadian Press

Eddie Hearn gives update on whether Anthony Joshua has split from coach Rob McCracken | Boxing | Sport

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Boxing promoter Eddie Hearn has provided an update on whether English heavyweight Anthony Joshua has split from coach Rob McCraken, after the fighter was pictured at a number of American gyms last week.

Joshua was seen on social media alongside Joshua Buatsi in Virgil Hunter’s gym, whilst Ronald and Rashidi Ellis uploaded images of the 31-year-old in Eddy Reynoso’s gym. pound-for-pound star Canelo Alvarez is based.

This therefore sparked huge rumours that Joshua had split with coach McCraken, after the former middleweight boxer came under scrutiny following his fighter’s heavyweight title defeat to Oleksandr Usyk last month.

Despite going into the fight as favourite, Joshua was outboxed by the classy Usyk after the Ukranian put on a masterclass to win on points in front of 65,000 fans at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.

This defeat led to many calling for Joshua to have a reshuffle within his team, and after a number of reports Hearn has finally opened up on his client’s stance with McCracken.

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Shields said: “It was them who reached out to me. They reached out to me and they asked me would I be interested in taking a look at AJ and he would like to come down to Texas and see if things could work out between him and I.

“I said, ‘yeah, no problem, I would love to take a look at him, love to see if we can mesh together.’”

The American trainer went on to add that receiving a call from one of the greatest heavyweights in the world did not phase him one bit, having trained some of the biggest names in the sport.

He added: “For me, anytime I talk boxing I don’t care who I’m talking boxing with. 

“There is no such thing for me as getting nerves or anything like that, because I do this everyday. 

“This is not something that is new to me, and names doesn’t mean anything to me. If I can help somebody, I can help somebody and I just tell what I think, what I feel, how I work and we go through it that way.”

Gerald Green retires after 12 seasons in NBA, joins Houston Rockets’ coaching staff

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NBA journeyman and prolific dunker Gerald Green has announced his retirement after 12 seasons.

The former Houston Rockets wing will join the team’s coaching staff as a player development coach, the team announced Friday.

Green, a native of Houston, played two seasons for the Rockets before sitting out all of last season with a foot injury. He spent time with several different franchises after being drafted by the Boston Celtics with the No. 18 pick in the 2005 draft.

Green, 35, won the 2007 NBA dunk contest and came in second the following year. He is perhaps best known for his “birthday dunk” in 2008, in which he blew out a candle on a cupcake placed on the back of the rim while dunking.

Steve Flesch takes lead in Dominion Energy Charity Classic

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RICHMOND, Va. — Steve Flesch birdied the par-4 18th hole for a 5-under 67 and a two-stroke lead over Bernhard Langer and Steven Alker on Saturday in the Dominion Energy Charity Classic, the first of three PGA Tour Champions playoff events.

Flesch reached 13-under 131 with his second straight bogey-free round on The Country Club of Virginia’s James River Course. He has played the back nine in 9 under.

“I did a lot of the same stuff as yesterday,” Flesch said. “I didn’t get off to a quick start, I parred the first five, but then when I got to six, I made a nice birdie and played another great back nine today.”

The 54-year-old Flesch won the 2018 Mitsubishi Electric Classic for his lone senior title. He won four times on the PGA Tour.

“I’ve just been kind of playing this week like I have the last, I guess, two months,” Flesch said. “I’m not hitting shots I don’t feel comfortable hitting. I’m just kind of, I hate the term `playing within myself,′ but I’m just hitting shots I know I can pull off and I’m not taking unnecessary chances.”

Langer, the 64-year-old German star who leads the Charles Schwab Cup points standings, also had a 67. He won the Richmond event in 2017.

“The pins are tough and the greens are very firm,” Langer said. “So, it’s difficult to get the ball near the hole to stop when the pins are in the front, and when the pins are in the back, you don’t go over the back, so it’s a tricky situation.”

Alker, the 50-year-old New Zealander who had a one-stroke lead over Flesch after an opening 63, dropped back with a 70.

“I didn’t quite obviously putt as well,” Alker said. “Sixty-three, you’ve got to putt well, so it wasn’t quite there, but I didn’t give myself as many chances. Wedges weren’t as close. Kind of struggled on the back nine a little bit.”

Tim Petrovic (67) and Doug Barron (68) were 10 under, and Jeff Sluman (68) and Gene Sauers (68) followed at 8 under.

Jim Furyk was 7 under after a 68.

Defending champion Phil Mickelson closed with quadruple-bogey 9 on the par-5 ninth for a 74. He was tied for 49th at 1 over.

Mickelson won the Constellation Furyk and Friends two weeks ago in Florida for his third senior victory in four career starts.

Karatsev and Cilic in Kremlin Cup final

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Aslan Karatsev has reached his third ATP Tour final of a breakout 2021 season, by beating Russian compatriot Karen Khachanov, to advance to a showdown with two-time Kremlin Cup winner Marin Cilic.

Karatsev saved four set points against Khachanov in the tiebreaker as he turned around a 6-3 deficit on his way to a 7-6 (9-7) 6-1 victory.

“I tried to not think about the score in the tie-break and just play point by point,” Karatsev, who still lives in Moscow, said.

“At 5-6 I made a great return and he got nervous and that is how I managed to win it.

“It means the world to me (to reach the final).

“I have been to this tournament many times, so this final I will play tomorrow will be special for me.”

Karatsev started the season by reaching the Australian Open semi-finals on his grand slam debut and followed that up with the Dubai Open title in March and a runner-up performance at the Serbia Open in April.

Cilic, who won the tournament in 2014 and 2015, came through his semi-final match 6-3 6-4 against Lithuanian lucky loser Ricardas Berankis – after going a break down in the second set.

“It was a tough match, Ricardas played well,” former world No.3 Cilic said.

“The first set was great from my side. I served amazing but then Ricardas began to find his rhythm and played much better in the second set…

“Mentally it was difficult, but I managed to play my best tennis at the right time.”

Kieron Pollard bemoans unacceptable collapse by West Indies against England in T20 World Cup

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“These sorts of games, we just have to bin it and move on. I don’t think any sort of panic will come into the camp.”

Kieron Pollard said it was “unacceptable” for an international team to be bowled out for 55 like his West Indies side were in their T20 World Cup opener against England in Dubai on Saturday night, but stressed that they would “bin it and move on” rather than making wholesale changes to their side or strategy.

West Indies, defending champions following their triumph against the same opponents in the 2016 edition, were bundled out for the third-lowest score in men’s T20 World Cup history on a blameless surface, which Pollard described as “a good wicket to bat on”.

It was their third successive defeat since they arrived in the UAE, following losses in warm-up matches against Pakistan and Afghanistan, but Pollard insisted that the best attitude for his side would be to forget about the game rather than over-analysing their collapse.

“There’s no words to explain it,” he said. “Being bundled out for 55 is unacceptable. We accept that – we accept the responsibility. These sorts of games, we just have to bin it and move on. I don’t think any sort of panic will come into the camp. We just need to accept it – we have to take it on our chests as big men and move on, because this is international sport.

“In the warm-up games, sometimes the intensity is a bit down with all the teams. Even though Afghanistan and Pakistan won, the intensity wasn’t still that great. For us it’s a matter of finding our straps. We haven’t batted well in the three games so far and we have to find a way to get a competitive total on the board.”

West Indies opted against selecting Roston Chase, who had won a T20I call-up on the back of an excellent season for St Lucia Kings in the CPL and had appeared to be their designated ‘anchor’ in the Marlon Samuels role in the middle order. Pollard said that while Chase would be considered, he was not inclined to make “wholesale changes” on the back of a freak defeat, and said that the promotion of Dwayne Bravo to break up their run of left-handers might have worked on another night.

“You can look at all sorts,” Pollard said. “Yes, Roston has got the opportunity to be selected in the squad, but we thought that this was the best XI to go out and try to win the first game for us. Just because we’ve been demolished in eight-point-something overs and made 50-odd, doesn’t mean there’s going to be wholesale changes because, as we know, when you’re not playing and you’re on the bench, your stock tends to go up a lot higher. We just need to bin it and try to come back stronger.

“We lost a couple of wickets early on and expected the guys to bat a couple of overs, just knock it around and see if we could set it up for the back end but we kept losing wickets, hence the reason Bravo went up to break the trend of the left-handers, just to knock it around a bit more. It didn’t work today and these things happen. We have a plan for how we want to play this game. It didn’t come off today.

“Obviously, we play a lot of cricket around the world, and this is not the first time something like this would have happened in any team or any environment. This is not something that’s new to any of us because you would have had it as you play a lot of cricket. With the experienced guys, in a situation like this, it’s easy for us to move on. We have another game in three days’ time and with this group, each game is important. It boils down to a four-game mini-tournament and we’ll take that and move on.”

Matt Roller is an assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo. @mroller98

Mercedes not ruling out another engine penalty for Hamilton

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  • Mercedes not ruling out another engine penalty for Hamilton this season

Mercedes would not rule out Formula 1 title contender Lewis Hamilton taking another engine penalty this season, after team mate Valtteri Bottas incurred a five-place drop at the U.S. Grand Prix on Friday.

Bottas, who was fastest in first practice for Sunday’s U.S. Grand Prix at Austin’s Circuit of the Americas, is now using his sixth engine — three more than he is allowed for the season.

The Finn already had grid penalties at the Italian and Russian Grands Prix for exceeding his allocation.

Hamilton took a 10-place penalty at this month’s Turkish Grand Prix for using a fourth engine and Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff would not rule out the seven times world champion having to do it again.

“I can’t say whether we will be taking one (another penalty) and how are the percentages,” the Austrian told reporters. “But obviously the risk is still there.

“What is difficult to evaluate is do you want to pre-empt the situation and take another penalty, and take the hit, or do you want to really run it and then possibly risk a DNF (non-finish).

“That is a discussion which is happening as we speak and we haven’t come to the right answers yet.”

Hamilton is six points behind Red Bull’s Max Verstappen in the championship with six races remaining. Austin has been one of their best tracks in recent years.

Verstappen, 24, started at the back of the grid in Russia last month after taking his fourth Honda engine of the campaign and finished second.

Aston Martin, Williams and McLaren also use Mercedes engines, the most reliable in the past but now causing unexpected headaches.

Williams George Russell and Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel are both set to start at the back of the grid in Austin after power unit changes.

“You see that we are suffering with reliability this year, we´re going onto the sixth engine … and it´s not something that we choose to do,” said Wolff.

“We are trying to really get on top of the problems and we haven´t understood fully … We are hanging on for dear life in supplying all customers and that is not trivial.”

Red Bull boss Christian Horner said it was clear Mercedes had issues to resolve but their cars were still eye-catchingly fast, with Bottas almost a second a lap quicker than Verstappen in first practice.

“It’s not usual for them in previous years to run their engines as hard as they have done this year in the first session,” he told Sky Sports television. “They are definitely running them harder.”

Mercedes are 36 points clear of Red Bull in the constructors’ standings but facing a major battle after seven years of success. (Reporting by Alan Baldwin)